Word: nursesã
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...their diet. The study, published in yesterday’s edition of the European journal Human Reproduction, included 18,555 married, healthy women ages 24 to 42, who were identified as trying to get pregnant or having become pregnant within an eight-year period. Data was collected through the Nurses??€™ Health Study in which questionnaires including information on fertility and diet were issued every two years...
...site of Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS), and many of them—from chicken pot pie to chicken marsala—are skinless. The research team, led by Harvard School of Public Health Assistant Professor of Epidemiology Dominique S. Michaud, analyzed two well-known cohort studies, the Nurses??€™ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study. The research was unique for its huge sample size—47,422 men and 88,471 women—and for examining the consumption of specific types of meat in relation to bladder cancer, Michaud wrote...
...carbohydrate diets—has found there is no association between such diets and an increased risk of developing coronary heart disease (CHD). The study, which appeared in the Nov. 9 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, relied on data collected from HSPH’s Nurses??€™ Health Study, a sweeping project which collected data from over 120,000 women starting in 1976. HSPH researchers also found that there was an association between a lowered risk of heart disease and low-carb diets that were high in vegetable sources of fat and protein...
...indoctrinated with the belief that girls grow up to become mommies and cook and clean the house. Around me, I could see some women in the workplace, but they tended to work certain jobs and almost without exception did so under male supervision. These women were usually secretaries, waitresses, nurses??€”there is nothing wrong with these jobs, whatever your gender—but in this environment, women do not grow up surrounded by female CEOs. However, I wanted to do other things, and luckily my mother told me I was smart enough to do whatever I wanted...
...insulin mechanisms will be necessary to determine the exact cause, she said. The study’s authors arrived at their conclusion after analyzing existing data from two major women’s health studies, both of which used nurses as subjects. The first of these studies, called the Nurses??€™ Health Study I, began in 1976 with 121,700 women. The second, the Nurses??€™ Health Study II, began with 116,671 in 1989. The two studies were observational, relying on participants to self-report data about their health and breast-feeding habits. Michels acknowledged that...